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Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +00001# This contains most of the executable examples from Guido's descr
2# tutorial, once at
3#
4# http://www.python.org/2.2/descrintro.html
5#
6# A few examples left implicit in the writeup were fleshed out, a few were
7# skipped due to lack of interest (e.g., faking super() by hand isn't
8# of much interest anymore), and a few were fiddled to make the output
9# deterministic.
10
11from test_support import sortdict
12import pprint
13
Tim Petersa427a2b2001-10-29 22:25:45 +000014class defaultdict(dict):
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +000015 def __init__(self, default=None):
Tim Petersa427a2b2001-10-29 22:25:45 +000016 dict.__init__(self)
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +000017 self.default = default
18
19 def __getitem__(self, key):
20 try:
Tim Petersa427a2b2001-10-29 22:25:45 +000021 return dict.__getitem__(self, key)
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +000022 except KeyError:
23 return self.default
24
25 def get(self, key, *args):
26 if not args:
27 args = (self.default,)
Tim Petersa427a2b2001-10-29 22:25:45 +000028 return dict.get(self, key, *args)
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +000029
30 def merge(self, other):
31 for key in other:
32 if key not in self:
33 self[key] = other[key]
34
35test_1 = """
36
37Here's the new type at work:
38
39 >>> print defaultdict # show our type
Guido van Rossuma4cb7882001-09-25 03:56:29 +000040 <class 'test.test_descrtut.defaultdict'>
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +000041 >>> print type(defaultdict) # its metatype
42 <type 'type'>
43 >>> a = defaultdict(default=0.0) # create an instance
44 >>> print a # show the instance
45 {}
46 >>> print type(a) # show its type
Guido van Rossuma4cb7882001-09-25 03:56:29 +000047 <class 'test.test_descrtut.defaultdict'>
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +000048 >>> print a.__class__ # show its class
Guido van Rossuma4cb7882001-09-25 03:56:29 +000049 <class 'test.test_descrtut.defaultdict'>
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +000050 >>> print type(a) is a.__class__ # its type is its class
Guido van Rossum77f6a652002-04-03 22:41:51 +000051 True
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +000052 >>> a[1] = 3.25 # modify the instance
53 >>> print a # show the new value
54 {1: 3.25}
55 >>> print a[1] # show the new item
56 3.25
57 >>> print a[0] # a non-existant item
58 0.0
Tim Petersa427a2b2001-10-29 22:25:45 +000059 >>> a.merge({1:100, 2:200}) # use a dict method
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +000060 >>> print sortdict(a) # show the result
61 {1: 3.25, 2: 200}
62 >>>
63
64We can also use the new type in contexts where classic only allows "real"
65dictionaries, such as the locals/globals dictionaries for the exec
66statement or the built-in function eval():
67
68 >>> def sorted(seq):
69 ... seq.sort()
70 ... return seq
71 >>> print sorted(a.keys())
72 [1, 2]
73 >>> exec "x = 3; print x" in a
74 3
75 >>> print sorted(a.keys())
76 [1, 2, '__builtins__', 'x']
77 >>> print a['x']
78 3
79 >>>
80
81However, our __getitem__() method is not used for variable access by the
82interpreter:
83
84 >>> exec "print foo" in a
85 Traceback (most recent call last):
86 File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
87 File "<string>", line 1, in ?
88 NameError: name 'foo' is not defined
89 >>>
90
91Now I'll show that defaultdict instances have dynamic instance variables,
92just like classic classes:
93
94 >>> a.default = -1
95 >>> print a["noway"]
96 -1
97 >>> a.default = -1000
98 >>> print a["noway"]
99 -1000
Tim Peters5d2b77c2001-09-03 05:47:38 +0000100 >>> 'default' in dir(a)
Guido van Rossum77f6a652002-04-03 22:41:51 +0000101 True
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +0000102 >>> a.x1 = 100
103 >>> a.x2 = 200
104 >>> print a.x1
105 100
Tim Peters5d2b77c2001-09-03 05:47:38 +0000106 >>> d = dir(a)
107 >>> 'default' in d and 'x1' in d and 'x2' in d
Guido van Rossum77f6a652002-04-03 22:41:51 +0000108 True
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +0000109 >>> print a.__dict__
110 {'default': -1000, 'x2': 200, 'x1': 100}
111 >>>
112"""
113
Tim Petersa427a2b2001-10-29 22:25:45 +0000114class defaultdict2(dict):
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +0000115 __slots__ = ['default']
116
117 def __init__(self, default=None):
Tim Petersa427a2b2001-10-29 22:25:45 +0000118 dict.__init__(self)
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +0000119 self.default = default
120
121 def __getitem__(self, key):
122 try:
Tim Petersa427a2b2001-10-29 22:25:45 +0000123 return dict.__getitem__(self, key)
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +0000124 except KeyError:
125 return self.default
126
127 def get(self, key, *args):
128 if not args:
129 args = (self.default,)
Tim Petersa427a2b2001-10-29 22:25:45 +0000130 return dict.get(self, key, *args)
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +0000131
132 def merge(self, other):
133 for key in other:
134 if key not in self:
135 self[key] = other[key]
136
137test_2 = """
138
139The __slots__ declaration takes a list of instance variables, and reserves
140space for exactly these in the instance. When __slots__ is used, other
141instance variables cannot be assigned to:
142
143 >>> a = defaultdict2(default=0.0)
144 >>> a[1]
145 0.0
146 >>> a.default = -1
147 >>> a[1]
148 -1
149 >>> a.x1 = 1
150 Traceback (most recent call last):
151 File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
152 AttributeError: 'defaultdict2' object has no attribute 'x1'
153 >>>
154
155"""
156
157test_3 = """
158
159Introspecting instances of built-in types
160
161For instance of built-in types, x.__class__ is now the same as type(x):
162
163 >>> type([])
164 <type 'list'>
165 >>> [].__class__
166 <type 'list'>
167 >>> list
168 <type 'list'>
169 >>> isinstance([], list)
Guido van Rossum77f6a652002-04-03 22:41:51 +0000170 True
Tim Petersa427a2b2001-10-29 22:25:45 +0000171 >>> isinstance([], dict)
Guido van Rossum77f6a652002-04-03 22:41:51 +0000172 False
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +0000173 >>> isinstance([], object)
Guido van Rossum77f6a652002-04-03 22:41:51 +0000174 True
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +0000175 >>>
176
177Under the new proposal, the __methods__ attribute no longer exists:
178
179 >>> [].__methods__
180 Traceback (most recent call last):
181 File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
182 AttributeError: 'list' object has no attribute '__methods__'
183 >>>
184
185Instead, you can get the same information from the list type:
186
187 >>> pprint.pprint(dir(list)) # like list.__dict__.keys(), but sorted
188 ['__add__',
189 '__class__',
190 '__contains__',
191 '__delattr__',
192 '__delitem__',
Guido van Rossum7b9144b2001-10-09 19:39:46 +0000193 '__delslice__',
Tim Peters80440552002-02-19 04:25:19 +0000194 '__doc__',
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +0000195 '__eq__',
196 '__ge__',
Guido van Rossum867a8d22001-09-21 19:29:08 +0000197 '__getattribute__',
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +0000198 '__getitem__',
199 '__getslice__',
200 '__gt__',
201 '__hash__',
202 '__iadd__',
203 '__imul__',
204 '__init__',
205 '__le__',
206 '__len__',
207 '__lt__',
208 '__mul__',
209 '__ne__',
210 '__new__',
Guido van Rossum3926a632001-09-25 16:25:58 +0000211 '__reduce__',
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +0000212 '__repr__',
213 '__rmul__',
214 '__setattr__',
215 '__setitem__',
216 '__setslice__',
217 '__str__',
218 'append',
219 'count',
220 'extend',
221 'index',
222 'insert',
223 'pop',
224 'remove',
225 'reverse',
226 'sort']
227
228The new introspection API gives more information than the old one: in
229addition to the regular methods, it also shows the methods that are
230normally invoked through special notations, e.g. __iadd__ (+=), __len__
231(len), __ne__ (!=). You can invoke any method from this list directly:
232
233 >>> a = ['tic', 'tac']
234 >>> list.__len__(a) # same as len(a)
235 2
236 >>> a.__len__() # ditto
237 2
238 >>> list.append(a, 'toe') # same as a.append('toe')
239 >>> a
240 ['tic', 'tac', 'toe']
241 >>>
242
243This is just like it is for user-defined classes.
244"""
245
246test_4 = """
247
248Static methods and class methods
249
250The new introspection API makes it possible to add static methods and class
251methods. Static methods are easy to describe: they behave pretty much like
252static methods in C++ or Java. Here's an example:
253
254 >>> class C:
255 ...
256 ... def foo(x, y):
257 ... print "staticmethod", x, y
258 ... foo = staticmethod(foo)
259
260 >>> C.foo(1, 2)
261 staticmethod 1 2
262 >>> c = C()
263 >>> c.foo(1, 2)
264 staticmethod 1 2
265
266Class methods use a similar pattern to declare methods that receive an
267implicit first argument that is the *class* for which they are invoked.
268
269 >>> class C:
270 ... def foo(cls, y):
271 ... print "classmethod", cls, y
272 ... foo = classmethod(foo)
273
274 >>> C.foo(1)
Tim Peters90ba8d92001-09-09 01:21:31 +0000275 classmethod test.test_descrtut.C 1
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +0000276 >>> c = C()
277 >>> c.foo(1)
Tim Peters90ba8d92001-09-09 01:21:31 +0000278 classmethod test.test_descrtut.C 1
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +0000279
280 >>> class D(C):
281 ... pass
282
283 >>> D.foo(1)
Tim Peters90ba8d92001-09-09 01:21:31 +0000284 classmethod test.test_descrtut.D 1
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +0000285 >>> d = D()
286 >>> d.foo(1)
Tim Peters90ba8d92001-09-09 01:21:31 +0000287 classmethod test.test_descrtut.D 1
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +0000288
289This prints "classmethod __main__.D 1" both times; in other words, the
290class passed as the first argument of foo() is the class involved in the
291call, not the class involved in the definition of foo().
292
293But notice this:
294
295 >>> class E(C):
296 ... def foo(cls, y): # override C.foo
297 ... print "E.foo() called"
298 ... C.foo(y)
299 ... foo = classmethod(foo)
300
301 >>> E.foo(1)
302 E.foo() called
Tim Peters90ba8d92001-09-09 01:21:31 +0000303 classmethod test.test_descrtut.C 1
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +0000304 >>> e = E()
305 >>> e.foo(1)
306 E.foo() called
Tim Peters90ba8d92001-09-09 01:21:31 +0000307 classmethod test.test_descrtut.C 1
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +0000308
309In this example, the call to C.foo() from E.foo() will see class C as its
310first argument, not class E. This is to be expected, since the call
311specifies the class C. But it stresses the difference between these class
312methods and methods defined in metaclasses (where an upcall to a metamethod
313would pass the target class as an explicit first argument).
314"""
315
316test_5 = """
317
318Attributes defined by get/set methods
319
320
Guido van Rossum8bce4ac2001-09-06 21:56:42 +0000321 >>> class property(object):
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +0000322 ...
323 ... def __init__(self, get, set=None):
324 ... self.__get = get
325 ... self.__set = set
326 ...
327 ... def __get__(self, inst, type=None):
328 ... return self.__get(inst)
329 ...
330 ... def __set__(self, inst, value):
331 ... if self.__set is None:
332 ... raise AttributeError, "this attribute is read-only"
333 ... return self.__set(inst, value)
334
335Now let's define a class with an attribute x defined by a pair of methods,
336getx() and and setx():
337
338 >>> class C(object):
339 ...
340 ... def __init__(self):
341 ... self.__x = 0
342 ...
343 ... def getx(self):
344 ... return self.__x
345 ...
346 ... def setx(self, x):
347 ... if x < 0: x = 0
348 ... self.__x = x
349 ...
Guido van Rossum8bce4ac2001-09-06 21:56:42 +0000350 ... x = property(getx, setx)
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +0000351
352Here's a small demonstration:
353
354 >>> a = C()
355 >>> a.x = 10
356 >>> print a.x
357 10
358 >>> a.x = -10
359 >>> print a.x
360 0
361 >>>
362
Guido van Rossum8bce4ac2001-09-06 21:56:42 +0000363Hmm -- property is builtin now, so let's try it that way too.
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +0000364
Guido van Rossum8bce4ac2001-09-06 21:56:42 +0000365 >>> del property # unmask the builtin
366 >>> property
367 <type 'property'>
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +0000368
369 >>> class C(object):
370 ... def __init__(self):
371 ... self.__x = 0
372 ... def getx(self):
373 ... return self.__x
374 ... def setx(self, x):
375 ... if x < 0: x = 0
376 ... self.__x = x
Guido van Rossum8bce4ac2001-09-06 21:56:42 +0000377 ... x = property(getx, setx)
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +0000378
379
380 >>> a = C()
381 >>> a.x = 10
382 >>> print a.x
383 10
384 >>> a.x = -10
385 >>> print a.x
386 0
387 >>>
388"""
389
390test_6 = """
391
392Method resolution order
393
394This example is implicit in the writeup.
395
396>>> class A: # classic class
397... def save(self):
398... print "called A.save()"
399>>> class B(A):
400... pass
401>>> class C(A):
402... def save(self):
403... print "called C.save()"
404>>> class D(B, C):
405... pass
406
407>>> D().save()
408called A.save()
409
410>>> class A(object): # new class
411... def save(self):
412... print "called A.save()"
413>>> class B(A):
414... pass
415>>> class C(A):
416... def save(self):
417... print "called C.save()"
418>>> class D(B, C):
419... pass
420
421>>> D().save()
422called C.save()
423"""
424
425class A(object):
426 def m(self):
427 return "A"
428
429class B(A):
430 def m(self):
431 return "B" + super(B, self).m()
432
433class C(A):
434 def m(self):
435 return "C" + super(C, self).m()
436
437class D(C, B):
438 def m(self):
439 return "D" + super(D, self).m()
440
441
442test_7 = """
443
444Cooperative methods and "super"
445
446>>> print D().m() # "DCBA"
447DCBA
448"""
449
450test_8 = """
451
452Backwards incompatibilities
453
454>>> class A:
455... def foo(self):
456... print "called A.foo()"
457
458>>> class B(A):
459... pass
460
461>>> class C(A):
462... def foo(self):
463... B.foo(self)
464
465>>> C().foo()
466Traceback (most recent call last):
467 ...
468TypeError: unbound method foo() must be called with B instance as first argument (got C instance instead)
469
470>>> class C(A):
471... def foo(self):
472... A.foo(self)
473>>> C().foo()
474called A.foo()
475"""
476
477__test__ = {"tut1": test_1,
478 "tut2": test_2,
479 "tut3": test_3,
480 "tut4": test_4,
481 "tut5": test_5,
482 "tut6": test_6,
483 "tut7": test_7,
484 "tut8": test_8}
485
486# Magic test name that regrtest.py invokes *after* importing this module.
487# This worms around a bootstrap problem.
488# Note that doctest and regrtest both look in sys.argv for a "-v" argument,
489# so this works as expected in both ways of running regrtest.
Tim Petersa0a62222001-09-09 06:12:01 +0000490def test_main(verbose=None):
491 # Obscure: import this module as test.test_descrtut instead of as
492 # plain test_descrtut because the name of this module works its way
493 # into the doctest examples, and unless the full test.test_descrtut
494 # business is used the name can change depending on how the test is
495 # invoked.
496 import test_support, test.test_descrtut
497 test_support.run_doctest(test.test_descrtut, verbose)
Tim Peters95c99e52001-09-03 01:24:30 +0000498
499# This part isn't needed for regrtest, but for running the test directly.
500if __name__ == "__main__":
Tim Petersa0a62222001-09-09 06:12:01 +0000501 test_main(1)